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Macedonia FYROM president says ‘no amount of pressure’ will change his mind on name deal

July 6, 2018 By administrator

The president of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) on Friday issued a statement saying that “no amount of pressure or blackmail” will make him change his mind and support the name deal signed with Greece last month.

The statement from the office of Gjorge Ivanov was issued in response to an interview on Thursday by FYROM Prime Minister Zoran Zaev with Greek state broadcaster ERT, in which the moderate leftist premier suggested that he is confident of the president’s support for the agreement renaming the country “North Macedonia” once it passes a public referendum in the fall.

“With his inconsistent, contradictory and confusing statements, Prime Minister Zaev continues to lie to and manipulate not only the Macedonian public, but also the public in Greece and the international community,” the statement from Ivanov’s office said.

“The Macedonian president will not endorse an agreement to the detriment of the Macedonian national identity and to the interests of the Republic of Macedonia,” it added.

On Thursday, FYROM’s main conservative opposition – the VMRO-DPMNE party, which backs Ivanov – filed treason charges against Zaev, Foreign Minister Nikola Dimitrov and House Speaker Talat Xhaferi over the name deal.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: former, Macedonia, Republic, Yugoslav

State of Hawaii recognizes Nagorno Karabakh Republic

March 30, 2016 By administrator

209153The House of Representatives of the U.S. State of Hawaii unanimously passed a resolution recognizing the independence of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, Armenian Embassy in the U.S. said in a Facebook Post.

The Resolution expressed its solidarity with the people of Nagorno Karabakh encouraging the international community to recognize the Republic as a free, independent and sovereign democracy.

The House will transmit a certified copy of the document to the President of the United States, and the majority leaders of the Senate and the House of Representatives.

Hawaii became the seventh state to recognize the independence of Nagorno Karabakh along with Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Louisiana, Maine, California and Georgia.

Hawaii1

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Tert.am. ԱՄՆ Հավայի նահանգի Ներկայացուցիչների պալատը ճանաչել է Արցախի անկախությունը
Embassy of Armenia to the United States

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Hawaii, Karabakh, recognize, Republic

Nagorno Karabakh Republic celebrates Revival Day

February 20, 2016 By administrator

206513President Bako Sahakyan congratulated the people of the Nagrono Karabakh Republic on the Artsakh Revival Day on Saturday, February 20.

“Indeed, 28 years ago Artsakh was revived; so was its freedom-loving spirit, patriotic soul, self-efficacy and belief in the future. It was a struggle based on legal, moral and universal human values, a nationwide movement, which consolidated the Armenians worldwide, uniting them around the single idea of living a free and independent life on their historic homeland. This being the legitimate aspiration of any nation, we paid a price to secure our right to freedom,” Sahakyan said.

Born and raised in the Artsakh Republic, today’s young generation continues the work of the 1988 devotees, he stressed.

“They have mastered the instructions to selflessly serve the country and its people, ready to do their utmost to further develop and strengthen Artsakh, reinforce its defense capability and ensure its security,” the President concluded.

Source: PanARMENIAN.Net

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Nagorno-Karabakh, Republic

HISTORY: The purges at the beginning of the Turkish Republic by Sait Cetinoglu

February 7, 2016 By administrator

arton121784-300x240After the Arab and Balkan provinces of the Ottoman Empire will be separated and made into states, the creation of a Turkish state has matured internationally. Since there are no more empire to save the successors of the Unionists have their hands free, they no longer have to be wary of actions to be taken against non-Turkish subjects.

Purges by way of exchange of population

Arriving at the Treaty of Lausanne, the majority of the non-Muslim population was driven out of Anatolia and the problem of the Armenian population had been resolved with the genocide of 1915. Before the Turkish War of Independence, the assets of these subjects not Muslims had already been confiscated. “Notable Turks seized land and businesses abandoned as a direct result of the departure of the Greeks and Armenians in Turkey … One factor that has attracted the provincial bourgeoisie of Anatolia to the national cause was the possibility that the Greeks and Armenians can one day return to their land, workshops and shops confiscated. This fear is one of the main themes of the Congress of Erzurum and will be more clearly addressed at the Sivas Congress. Arriving at the date of 30 January 1923 the Anatolian Greek population subject to population exchange had already fallen, and the Armenian population had been reduced to less than 100,000. Regarding religion, the Anatolian population was about was homogenized! But it is understood later that the religious homogeneity was not enough.

If one approaches the subject from the perspective of the Greek population, “the migration of Greeks from Turkey started with the Balkan war in 1912 and continued permanently from that date. Their migration began and peaked in 1914-1915 with the Turkification policy Aegean coasts for military reasons … The departure of the Greeks who had played an important role in the economic life of the country was now Turkified in haste . These Greeks had left behind much of their wealth trying to flee a victorious army. (…) After the war, shared by the state itself or with significant tolerance to the seizure of the land and the property abandoned by local notables, can be considered as an effective tool in supporting new regime and in the training of its new executives. (…)

To give you an idea of ​​just abandoned property on the city of Izmir, in an interview with the Anatolia newspaper dated June 18, 1924, the Minister of Finance Hasan Fehmi Bey confirms: “The Greeks have left 10,678 properties, 2,173 stores, 79 plants, 2 steam rooms, 1 hospital; Armenians and Jews have left 1,600 properties, 2,821 shops, 89 mills, 2 steam rooms, 1 hospital. “The goal of National Defense, was to defend” Turkish goods “from the expropriation of non-Muslims. Where associations of national defense were the most active, concerned the countries where the expropriation took place. The new classes of rich were ready to fight like lions to avoid losing their property and fear of revenge of Armenians and Greeks if they returned. “

Cite here the example of “the storm of those who got rich on the backs of Armenians”. In newspapers dated April 2, 1924 are published articles about Armenians who returned to Turkey in 1924. “While we do not allow minority subjects who left with a Turkish passport to go, how do those who leave the country with a foreign passport can return and reclaim their property? “There we wrote. These articles have published for months began to turn into a storm and knocked heads, those of the minister of internal affairs and many bureaucrats. The case of the storm of those who have enriched themselves at the expense of Armenian demonstrates how far we are willing to fight to defend like lions confiscated property.

The Turkish government also does not want the exiles returned, and that is why it distributes releases where we threatens those who have returned, “Among those who have returned, those who want to leave the country may do so within a month, otherwise we will not be responsible for what happens to them. “ And those who are reclaiming their property and obtain judicial confirmation that the goods belong to them, they were told that “the Ministry of Internal Affairs gave the order not to make these goods,” or we sent hired killers to those who insisted. Thus, for various pressure tactics most genocide survivors were forced to leave again their land and dispersed in other countries. Sarkis Çerkezyan tells us that following his father lived at the time: “The lawyer had made him understand the reality of the situation, saying Mr. Çerkezyan it is important not that you claim anything if you claim that your property you will be hanged in turn, the gallows is there. “ Those who want to save their lives, are forced to leave their property and rebuild their future in other countries.

“The Republic was as the resurgence of the Ottoman Empire which distributed land to his trusted and that way, she placed above the law … The financial resources acquired during the wars preceding the establishment of the Republic the strengthened. When the non-Muslim population has been out of the game, their properties and their statutes were the resources of the new regime could now be distributed to the people. This distribution has accelerated the creation of a local bourgeoisie, and this class is subordinate to the orders of the state (…)

We understand the extent of looting by the correspondence between the Prime Minister Ismet Inonu and Rauf Orbay at the Lausanne Conference; even those who saw themselves as the “true son of the fatherland” were in a contest looting goods Anatolian Greeks. In a cable dated December 2, 1923 sent by Rauf Orbay Ismet Pasha, it says “after placing the homeless in western Anatolia can still accommodate sixty thousand households.” About a month and a half later, in a cable dated January 20, 1923, Ismet Pasha asked the Prime Minister Rauf Orbay if we can still accommodate these households. The reply dated 23 January 1923 Prime Minister Rauf Orbay is significant “today, we can easily place twenty thousand households,” he said. This means that in a period as short as a month and a half two-thirds of the houses of the Greeks who were forced to leave the country were seized or assigned (…)

The daily İli Türk made a classification of those who settled in the abandoned properties of an exclusive area of ​​the city of Izmir. The newspaper had settled “officials in 44 properties abandoned by the Greeks, notable in the 27 properties, giving opportunists notable tunes in 14, arrived immigrants following the exchange of population in the 52 .. . And in the best 13 properties, deputies receiving 3,000 to 4,000 pounds per year (18). Ahmet Emin Yalman stated the following: “The main cause for looting ambitions had become as widespread was that politicians lived looting (…).

The scale of the looting could not prevent the existence of a handful of entrepreneurs and non-Muslim capital. The liquidation of these companies and the non-Muslim capital was now become one of the main policies of the Republic (…)

However, there were non-Muslims who have not been subject to this exchange policy. They had provided assistance to the Turkish War of Independence. “In 1921 in Söke, he was given permission to stay in Turkey by government order dated December 17, 1924 at Constantine Dimitri who had protected the Turkish population and the fact spying for Turkey. (…)

Translation Vilma Kouyoumdjian

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: purges, Republic, Sait Cetinoglu, Turkish

Czech Republic President voices opposition to Turkey’s EU accession bid

December 10, 2015 By administrator

Czech President Milos Zeman speaks during a  conference on the Holocaust,  commemorating the liberation of concentration camp Auschwitz in 1945 in Prague on Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2015. (AP Photo/CTK, Michal Kamaryt)    SLOVAKIA OUT

Czech President Milos Zeman speaks during a conference on the Holocaust, commemorating the liberation of concentration camp Auschwitz in 1945 in Prague on Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2015. (AP Photo/CTK, Michal Kamaryt) SLOVAKIA OUT

Czech President Milos Zeman has voiced opposition to Turkey‘s bid to become a member of the European Union, saying that although Turkey is a NATO member, it sometimes acts as if it is an ally of the radical terrorist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), a Czech news agency reported.

In his remarks made at the end of his three-day visit to north Bohemia on Wednesday, Zeman reportedly criticized the EU’s recent offering to Turkey of 3 billion euros ($3.2 billion) in financial aid in exchange for keeping Syrian refugees on its soil.

“The Roman Empire, before it collapsed, too, paid tribute money to barbarians [for them not to pilfer its territory],” Zeman was quoted by the Czech news agency as saying.

Zeman argued that Turkey is able to accept Syrian refugees because both Turkish and Syrian nations share the same religion. “The danger does not rest in Islam as such but in transferring these [Muslim] habits to Europe,” he reportedly said.

The Czech leader also said that Turkey must be approached with “caution.”

The EU recently offered Turkey 3 billion euros ($3.2 billion) in financial aid to keep Syrian refugees on its soil in return for accelerated EU accession talks and speeded-up visa liberalization for Turks visiting Europe.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Czech, eu accession, oppose, president, Republic, Turkey

Nagorno-Karabakh’s a Happy Breakaway Republic, But Its War Goes On

July 12, 2015 By administrator

BY Anna Nemtsova

In the decades since the post-Soviet war that spawned this little “independent” enclave, the Armenian diaspora in the West has helped turn it into a surprising democracy.

1436666960715.cachedSTEPANAKERT, Nagorno-Karabakh—At sunset flocks of swallows race through the pink sky over the central square of Stepanakert, a city once bombed and largely destroyed in a the post-Soviet war between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In the 21 years since the heavy fighting ended, there is still occasional shooting around the frontier with Azerbaijan, but this capital of the self-proclaimed state — this early “breakaway republic” — of Nagorno-Karabakh is peaceful. Published on The daily beast

Superficially, it resembles other quasi-nations dotting the map of the former Soviet Union: Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Transnistria and more recently the embattled self-proclaimed states of Donetsk and Luhansk in Ukraine. But where those have depended mainly on Russian backing, and critics would argue they are Russian creations, Nagorno-Karabakh has found other sponsors.

Some 150,000 people live here, but the enclave has support from a much greater population of ethnic Armenians around the world, and on a summer evening the veranda of the Florence Garden restaurant on the corner of the main square is full of Karabakh’s visiting benefactors. The sound of clinking glasses mingles with leisurely chatting in Armenian, French, English and Russian. The tranquil scene seems almost surreal, considering Karabakh’s war-torn history and its militarized present.

In some crucial respects, indeed, it is more at ease and more fair to its people than Armenia itself. Less than 200 miles away in the Armenian capital of Yerevan, police detained dozens of civil activists last week. Armenian protesters unhappy about state corruption and mismanagement  had blocked a street outside the presidential palace for over two weeks.

Nagorno-Karabakh, tucked in the green mountains of the Caucasus, has preferred to remain a distant observer of any geopolitical turmoil, developing under the influence of the Armenian diaspora in the West.

The Artsakh Republic, as locals call their mountain homeland, is aware that the rest of the world did not acknowledge the republic’s existence. But people also realized that any political instability could awaken the not-so-frozen war with Azerbaijan. Dozens of soldiers continued to die on both sides of the 21-year-old front line that is now the de facto border between Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan. Another all-out war could involve neighboring Iran and Russia, and wholesale destruction once again, and that’s not wanted here.

To prevent traumatizing revolutions, Stepanakert made elections transparent and honest. Besides, the state is so tiny that it seems everyone knows everyone, and local officials are just too exposed to cheat the voters.

Arayik Harutyunyan, the prime minister, told The Daily Beast that Nagorno-Karabakh is different from the other internationally unrecognized states in the former Soviet Union. If Abkhazia, Transnistria, South Ossetia and the recently broken away and still fighting Donetsk and Luhansk republics embraced opaque authoritarian governments, Nagorno-Karabakh demonstrated that with transparent and democratic presidential elections it could beat corruption and organized crime successfully.

The tranquil scene seems almost surreal, considering Karabakh’s war-torn history and its militarized present.

One could leave a purse on a bench in the park and find it the next morning, locals told us. “Maybe we managed to cure the typical post-Soviet diseases because we are so isolated,” Harutyunyan said in a recent interview, then thought for a moment and conceded with a smile: “We are intolerant toward gays.”

Democracy is not the only goal for Nagorno-Karabakh. Very soon, Harutyunyan promised, Karabakh would turn into a black caviar heaven, to demonstrate to Azerbaijan that they not only despise dictatorship, they can also grow rich: “In five years, our Golden Fish will produce and export tons of black caviar,” Harutyunyan said. Last year, Nagorno-Karabakh founded the Golden Fish sturgeon farm thanks to a Swiss-Armenian investor, Vardan Semakesh, who was also the largest investor in the republic’s hydroelectric power plant.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s shaky status does not allow it to have its own airport. The windy road trip from Armenia takes six or seven hours. But at the border checkpoint last week, two reporters in a car did not have to show their documents.

In the last decade, Nagorno-Karabakh has signed friendly resolutions and agreements with various American and European cities and regions. Last year, Basque representatives visited Stepanakert; thanks to the strong Armenian lobby in the U.S., the state of California established cooperation with the local administration. Armenia, whose president, Serj Sargsyan, was born here, provided more than 30 percent of the modest annual  budget of about $200 million.

If in Armenia people are angry with deep-rooted corruption, here in the break-away state, businessmen feel safe. “I escaped Yerevan and opened my business in Stepanakert, where there is no corruption and nobody can make me pay a bribe,” says Dro Karapetyan, the owner of the Florence Garden restaurant and rock club.

And yet any conversation on the street or in private homes slowly drifts back to memories of war, and to stories of today’s losses on the border. It can seem at times that Nagorno-Karabakh is living a Groundhog Day of violence. More than 30,000 people died in the Armenia-Azerbaijan ethnic conflict in the late 1980s and early 1990s; hundreds of thousands were forced out of their homes on both sides of the front line.

When asked about similarities with the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, Lucine Sarkisyan, an assistant at a grocery store, shook head dismissively. ”In Luhansk and Donetsk they have water and electricity—we had nothing when we lived in that basement for two years,” she said, pointing at her house across the street.

Every local schoolboy knows that right after graduation he will put on his uniform and go to defend his state from enemies. That is what school programs taught the post-war generations; schools also train kids to assemble Kalashnikovs, throw grenades and climb walls for combat training. Many boys liked to watch weekly television shows about the army. One of the children’s drawings at Stepanakert’s School #3 exhibit themed “Peace” depicted soldiers marching in front of Grad missile launch systems.

Has Nagorno-Karabakh ever heard of a pacifist movement? “I have trouble imagining anything like that,” Stella Balayan, a school teacher in Martuni told The Daily Beast. She is still in mourning for her son, Col. Garik Balayan, who was killed in May 2014 during his night shift on the border. Looking at a printout of an official commemoration, Stella learned more about her son’s military service than she had ever heard from him.

One thing people in Nagorno-Karabakh do not understand is why their friend Russia is selling weapons to Azerbaijan, for about $4 billion in the last few years, including sophisticated S-300 anti-aircraft missile systems. Last August, shooting in the conflict intensified, the death toll increased by dozens.

Playing the role of peacemaker, Russian President Vladimir Putin brought the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia to the same table in his residence in Sochi to discuss the situation with Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev insisted that Armenia should withdraw its forces from Nagorno-Karabakh, while Armenian President Serj Sarkisyan accused Azerbaijan of not following UN resolutions.

When asked about how Russia helps Nagorno-Karabakh, the self-proclaimed state’s foreign minister, Karén Mirzoyan, said that Nagorno-Karabakh did not see much help from Russia. “We receive more support from the United States,” Mizroyan said.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: breakaway, HAPPY, Nagorno-Karabakh’s, Republic

First Republic of Armenia was too small to live on, but it was too great to die – Amatouni Virabyan

May 28, 2015 By administrator

f556702b054b49_556702b054b84.thumbDirector of the National Archives of Armenia Amatouni Virabyan regards as a miracle the May victories in Sardarapat, Gharakilis and Bash-Aparan, when the Republic of Armenia was declared on May 28, which the National Council members in Tbilisi had never expected.

“They were not ready for that and they had no program that envisaged a victory that would be celebrated. In memoirs I read that all the National Council members were sad when they discussed a resolution after the victory,” Mr Virabyan told reporters on Thursday.

The government was formed and the first prime minister of the First Republic of Armenia Hovhannes Kajaznuni was told to “govern from Tbilisi.”

“If the then head of the Armenian Council in Yerevan Aram Manukyan had not put forward an urgent demand, they would not have come, though Yerevan was a provincial town, while Tbilisi was provided with grain and food,” Mr Virabyan said.

It was for the first time that the Armenian people had been united, he added.

The situation was critical, Yerevan would have fallen and the Armenian people would have been annihilated.

The Sardarapat battle broke out on May 22, and the National Council did not know what was going in Eastern Armenia.

The Armenian population was in a disastrous situation as Turkey decided to seize Eastern Armenia, after siezing Western Armenia, and annihilate Armenians thus putting an end to the Armenian Cause.

On May 22, the Armenian troops united and launched an offensive and seized Sardarapat. There were so many volunteers that recruitment was discontinued.

Turkey’s regular army, which had defeated the British troops in the Battle of Gallipoli, suffered defeat and lost 3,000 soldiers.

“In fact, we had not had statehood since 1045, when Ani fell. And our state was restored at that time. Although the First Republic of Armenia was too small to live on, it was too great to die. It was a state,” Mr Virabyan concluded.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, first, Republic

Armenia marks First Republic Day

May 28, 2015 By administrator

first-republic-dayArmenia celebrates First Republic Day on May 28.

In May 1918, the Armenian regular military forces and volunteers defeated the Turkish troops, and prevented the latter’s invasion of Yerevan, the capital city of Armenia.

This triumph enabled the Armenian people to restore their statehood, which was lost centuries ago.

It was 97 years ago on this day in Tbilisi, the capital city of Georgia, that the Armenian National Council declared the independence of Armenia and the establishment of the First Republic of Armenia.

The May 28 celebrations in Armenia are traditionally held at Sardarapat Memorial, which eternalizes the memory of the Armenian heroes who prevented a Turkish invasion of Armenia back in 1918.

report news.an

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, first, Republic

Serb Republic President wants to promptly recognize #ArmenianGenocide

April 17, 2015 By administrator

VUCIC - DODIKSerb Republic President Milorad Dodik directed to the Parliament the text of a “Statement on Recognition of Armenian Genocide in 1915-17,” reports Radio and Television of Vojvodina (RTV), citing Dodik’s office website. The President proposed to adopt the statement during the coming session.

The statement reads:

“The Serb nation of the Serb Republic, as a freedom-loving nation, as well as a nation, which lost one third of its working population and a huge amount of natural and mineral resources during the World War I, expresses its solidarity with the efforts of the Armenian nation and supports it in its struggle for the recognition of historic justice and its terming as genocide, as an extermination perpetrated against Armenians during the fall of the Ottoman Empire.”

The statement mentions that the Serb Republic needs to “carry out work on the protection of human rights and international criminal law, underscore that a crime against humanity has no statute of limitations, and contribute to the struggle against the Genocide denial.”

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Republic, serb

Canadian publication/edition: Republic of Nagorno Karabakh won Azerbaijan in war for independence

December 15, 2014 By administrator

Nagorno-KarabakhHenry Srebrnik, a political science professor at the University of Prince Edward Island in Canada, has published an article on the website of the Canadian daily newspaper “Journal Pioneer” regarding the relations of Azerbaijan with Armenia, Iran and Israel. The article notes that 4,400 square kilometre Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast, with more than three-quarters of ethnic Armenian population, was incorporated into Azerbaijan only at the period of its sovietisation. As the USSR disintegrated, the parliament of Azerbaijan in 1991 abolished the autonomous status of the region, while the majority Armenian population declared its independence. This resulted in a war between the between the majority ethnic Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, backed by Armenia, and Azerbaijan.

By 1994, when a cease-fire went into effect, the new de facto republic of Nagorno-Karabakh had proved victorious. Today Armenians control all of the territory, which includes some 140,000 residents, 95 per cent of which comprise ethnic Armenians. However, Baku has not reconciled itself to this situation and refuses to accept the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh, Srebrnik writes.

As for the Irano-Azerbaijani relations, that commenced with Iran recognizing the independence of Azerbaijan in 1992, they “quickly turned sour,” as the author puts it. The reason was that Azerbaijan, with 85% Shia population, didn’t justify the Shia-majority Iran’s expectations, which planned to spread its Islamic Revolution. In its turn, Azerbaijan started to promote the idea of “Greater Azerbaijan,” which would unite the country with the 16 million Azeris in northwest Iran. In February 2012, a member of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party asked the government to change the country’s name to “North Azerbaijan,” implicitly suggesting that the Azeris who live in northern Iran are in need of liberation.

The article points out how Azerbaijan openly accused Iran of interfering in its domestic affairs by supporting the Islamic Party of Azerbaijan (AIP), a pro-Iranian and religious Shiite opposition party banned by Baku. The leader of the AIP, Movsum Samadov, called for the overthrow of President Ilham Aliyev’s government and was sentenced to 12 years in jail in 2011. The next year 22 Azerbaijanis charged with spying for Iran were given lengthy prison sentences.

At the root of the bilateral strategic and economic relations between Azerbaijan and Israel, which is the second largest customer for Azeri oil, Srebrnik observes the common goal of containing Iranian influence.

To describe the character of the relations between these countries, the author cites Ilham Aliyev’s words, who said that his country’s relationship with the Jewish state resembles an iceberg, as “nine-tenths of it is below the surface.” This phrase was quoted in a memo sent to Washington by Donald Lu, the deputy chief of mission of the U.S. embassy in Baku, in 2009.

Srebrnik brings the example of a $1.6 billion defence deal, signed between Azerbaijan and Israel in February, 2012. The deal included air defense systems, intelligence hardware, and drones.

A month later the magazine Foreign Policy reported that Israel had been granted access to air bases in Azerbaijan on Iran’s northern border to serve Israel in a possible strike on Iran. Access to such airfields would mean that Israeli fighter-bombers would not have to refuel mid-flight.

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Canada, Karabakh, Republic

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